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French Poetry - Literary Criticism, Literary Movements - General & Miscellaneous, 19th Century French Literature - Literary Criticism, U.S. & Canadian Poetry - 20th Century - Literary Criticism
Ezra Pound and the symbolist inheritance by S Hamilton — book cover

Ezra Pound and the symbolist inheritance

by S Hamilton
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Overview

In this revisionary study of Ezra Pound's poetics, Scott Hamilton exposes the extent of the modernist poet's debt to the French romantic and symbolist traditions. Whereas previous critics have focused on a single influence, Hamilton explores a broad spectrum of French poets, including Theophile Gautier, Tristan Corbiere, Jules Laforgue, Remy de Gourmont, Henri de Regnier, Jules Romains, Laurent Tailhade, Paul Verlaine, and Stephane Mallarme. This exploration of Pound's canon demonstrates his logic in borrowing from the French tradition as well as a paradoxical circularity to his poetic development. Hamilton begins by explaining how Pound read Gautier's poetry as an example of Parnassianism and the "satirical realism" of Flaubert and the modern novelistic tradition. He reveals, however, a crucial blind spot in Pound's poetic vision that facilitated his return to precisely those romantic and proto-symbolist elements in Gautier that were celebrated by Baudelaire and Mallarme, and that Pound, as a modern poet, felt obliged to repress. Arguing that Pound's response to symbolism was not specifically modernist, Hamilton shows how his dual attraction to the lyric and prose traditions, to symbolism and realism, and to the visionary and the historical helps us better to understand our own postmodern sensibility.

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Book Details

Published
July 1, 1992
Publisher
Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, c1992.
Pages
276
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780691069241

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